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New technology at Biomass Conference |
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Written by Canadian Biomass
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Page 1 of 2 May 25, 2010, Minneapolis, MN – Canadian Biomass takes its gear coverage on the road, reporting on some
of the new technology from the International Biomass Conference &
Expo held in Minneapolis, Minnesota, in early May.
Mulching for biomass
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Fecon's Bio-Harvester collects small woody biomass and helps provide a renewable biomass energy supply.
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Gone are the days when mulch (now precious biomass) was left to rot on the ground on all land clearing, right-of-way, or line work. Both Fecon and GyroTrac were on hand to show off options to reclaim that valuable biomass. Fecon brought its Bio-Harvester, a machine that simultaneously fells, chips, and collects small-diameter woody biomass. The Bio-Harvester is ideal for pre-commercial and commercial thinning applications, non-merchantable timber, and brush. The Bio-Harvester helps provide a non-agricultural renewable biomass energy supply that enhances forest management practices. It harvests fire-prone ladder fuel material, producing wood chips from previously unused biomass sources. Wood chips can then be used to produce bioenergy via the generation of electricity or liquid fuel production.
www.fecon.com
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GyroTrac's Bioenergy Baling System
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Mulcher manufacturer GyroTrac has a prototype Bioenergy Baling System that can cost-effectively process, harvest, clean, compress, and bale all in one step, with one machine and one operator. There is no need for additional equipment such as tub grinders, crawler excavators, or large dump trucks. Production ranges from 18 to 44 bales/hour (4 x 4 foot bales), depending on tree size and terrain.
www.gyrotrac.com
BTI enters pellet machine business
Well known in the aggregates business for rugged machinery, Breaker Technology Inc. (BTI) has formed a Bioenergy Division offering a new concept in pelletizing. The Pellet Pro-4 is a new punch and die pelletizing technology that BTI says requires substantially less production energy, lower maintenance costs, and simple universal tooling suitable for processing a wide variety of raw materials into very dense pellets. The design features a variable rate output for energy conservation, no conditioning chambers or steam required, no additives or binders necessary, and easy operation. The quick change tooling allows mills to change the punch and die sets after normal wear and tear or to produce a different pellet diameter. Rated output from the Canadian-designed and -made machine is 1 to 4 tonnes/hour per unit, depending on the raw material.
www.rockbreaker.com
Briquetting hits North America?
It’s not all about pellets, or at least that was the message of several briquetting system suppliers on hand, including CF Nielsen, DI PIU, Hitech Agro, Biomass Briquette Systems, and RUF. Biomass Briquette Systems is a North American supplier that designs and engineers its equipment here and manufactures overseas for a combination of local industry knowledge and low-cost manufacturing. It offers a wide range of grinders, conveyors, silos, and briquette presses for turnkey systems of varying capacities. Complete systems or low-capital starter systems are available, with systems producing up to 8,000 tonnes/year coming in as low as $250,000. RUF U.S. was on hand to discuss the energy consumption advantages of producing briquettes over pellets. Whereas heating oil or liquid petroleum gas require 12% to almost 15% of their respective energy content for extraction, conversion, and delivery, and pellets require 2.7%, RUF claims that wood briquettes require just 1.3% of their energy value to manufacture.
www.biomassbriquettesystems.com
www.ruf-briquetter.com
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